magisterrex Retro Games

I've been gaming since the days of Pong and still own a working Atari 2600. I tend to ramble on about retro games, whether they be board games, video games or PC games. Sometimes I digress. Decades after earning it, I'm finally putting the skills I learned while completing my history degree from the University of Victoria to good use. Or so I think. If you're into classic old school gaming, this blog is for you!

Need Reviews?

Got a game or product you want reviewed? Send me an email! Will review board games, PC games, video games and accessories (Xbox 360 or Wii, but also new releases for classic systems - you know who you are!)

Rules of Etiquette:

All comments welcome, excepting those that:

1. Are obvious SPAM
2. Contain profanity
3. Are full of p0rn
4. Advertise or contain links to retail websites
5. Are abusive or potentially libelous

Categories

Categories

Email Subscription

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

RSS Feed

Ever scoured the Internet looking for what exactly you were missing from the old board game you pulled from your closet, only to find no one who could give you the answer? Well, stop that fruitless searching through endless google results, as this week we look at the still-popular Milton Bradley classic, Stratego, the 1972 “fascinating two-handed strategy game.”

Box art for the 1972 Stratego game.

The contents of Stratego are as follows:

The game box (with a large picture of a uniformed older gentleman, perhaps a Field Marshall, about to make a move on the Stratego game board).

The game board (featuring a map of the geography in which the battle will take place in the center, bordered on either side with 12 squares showing the piece values.)

Two plastic trays to fit the game pieces in

Two sets of 40 army pieces, one in blue and one in red, consisting of:

Aside from the inner cardboard filler to help hold all the pieces in an orderly fashion, that’s it. Stratego remains a popular game, and this version brings back many memories for those who played it. For those who haven’t played the game against a friend, what are you waiting for?

Some games are released and gain an instant cult following, yet do not find a larger audience with the larger PC gamer market. Sometimes they are too quirky. Sometimes the game’s instructions are confusing, and require a great deal of experimentation to learn and understand. Sometimes the genre is experiencing market oversaturation, and no matter how good the game is, people are too tired of playing that kind of game. Whatever the reason, great games have been released that did not find more than a toehold in the gamerverse, and disappeared into the mists of gaming history. Ascendancy, released by The Logic Factory in 1995, was one such game.

Cover art for the 1995 PC game, Ascendancy.

Ascendancy was a turn-based strategy game set in a sci-fi universe, and gave the player several species options to choose from – 21 in all. (Interestingly, Humans were not included as one of those races. ) Each species had its strengths and weaknesses, advantages and disadvantages. For instance, some races were better negotiators, some better scientists, some better weapon makers, some better at defending their turf, and some better at invasion. How soon you met these other species depended on how dense of star cluster you chose at the beginning of the game. The denser the cluster, the more planets existed, and more star lanes connecting them. Those star lanes were the key to victory, as could be controlled by a particular alien race, and that control could vary as systems were conquered. For even more variety, the computer randomized your opponents, which meant never knowing exactly what you faced; the game was different every time you played it.

Title screen for the 1995 PC game, Ascendancy.

An interesting feature of Ascendancy was the Tech Tree, which was a three-dimensional representation of the scientific advances that were available to the alien race. As each discovery was made, new paths – branches – were opened for development. The Logic Factory outdid itself with the names of the techno-advancements, with such titles as Tonklin Diary (which allows for Tonklin Frequency Analyzers) or Spacetime Surfing (which allows for Star Lane Drives) or Gravity Control (which allows for Quantum Singularity Launchers) or Momentum Deconservation (which allows for Concussion Shields), and so on. Of course, you could jumpstart your research by locating and searching through alien ruins on the planets your fleet visited for lost technology, which was yet another random variable that made Ascendancy both ever-changing and immanently replayable.

Choose your race in Ascendancy

Ascendancy was a wonderful game with a huge flaw: the AI. Although casual gamers enjoyed the game’s challenge, more advanced gamers found the AI to be weak and easily mastered. The Logic Factory responded by issuing a patch which greatly enhanced the game’s AI, but in 1995 few people were on the Internet, so the patch never found widespread release. For those itching to play the original Ascendancy with the Antagonizer patch, here it is: ANTAGONIZER and README.

Planetary screen in Ascendancy

As could be expected in any multi-civilization strategy game, Ascendancy included a robust diplomacy element. As new species discovered your existence, their attitudes and responses were influenced by how you reacted to them. Peace treaties, hostilities, technology exchanges, invitations to join in current conflicts were examples of some of the outcomes resulting from an exchange of diplomatic pleasantries. As in real life, species who considered you weak would make broader demands and reject overtures; species who considered you strong worked on making you their best friend.

Successful research screen in Ascendancy

Ascendancy was a quirky game, but it found a receptive audience due to its stellar gameplay. It earned a 93% score and an Editor’s Choice award from PC Gamer, and received some high praise from the grognard’s grognard, William R. Trotter (which has an interesting story and legend surrounding the review and his subsequent strategy guide work on the same game). Ascendancy also won a Codie Award for Best Strategy Software in 1996, in a field that included Allied General and Command & Conquer. (Mind you, they gave the Best Adventure/Roleplaying Game award to Oregon Trail II that same year.)

Searching the ruins in Ascendancy

Time has passed and the prospect of a sequel remain dim. However, a new version built for the iPhone (and iPad) has been released, and has received some solid reviews from those who game on those platforms. But for the retrogamer, the original Ascendancy remains supreme in turn-based space strategy exploration and conquest, and well worth investing a little time playing once again!